KHoff
Structural
- Aug 20, 2013
- 60
I received an RFI regarding a chipped pile (see attached picture). It is a 16" diameter pile and is supporting approximately 45 kips, so it is a relatively lightly loaded pile. Consider the two options listed below:
1. Damaged part of pile is contained within the portion that is embedded in the grade beam above. Leave pile as is and pour the grade beam.
2. Trim top of pile flat, clean reinforcement of all concrete, and lower grade beam excavation in order to maintain adequate cover. Then pour grade beam.
Clearly, #2 is the more conservative option. But my question is, from an engineering perspective, is there anything wrong with option #1? Is there a potential failure mode that could realistically occur from a 45 kip load?
Based on the picture there is more than enough flat area remaining for 3,000 psi concrete to bear a 45 kip load. This does introduce some eccentricity into the pile, but the pile is reinforced to a depth of 15 feet. At that depth I would imagine the eccentricity would be negligible. Is there anything I am missing?
1. Damaged part of pile is contained within the portion that is embedded in the grade beam above. Leave pile as is and pour the grade beam.
2. Trim top of pile flat, clean reinforcement of all concrete, and lower grade beam excavation in order to maintain adequate cover. Then pour grade beam.
Clearly, #2 is the more conservative option. But my question is, from an engineering perspective, is there anything wrong with option #1? Is there a potential failure mode that could realistically occur from a 45 kip load?
Based on the picture there is more than enough flat area remaining for 3,000 psi concrete to bear a 45 kip load. This does introduce some eccentricity into the pile, but the pile is reinforced to a depth of 15 feet. At that depth I would imagine the eccentricity would be negligible. Is there anything I am missing?